Odd-parity effect and scale-dependent viscosity in atomic quantum gases
Odd-parity effect and scale-dependent viscosity in atomic quantum gases
Two-dimensional electron gases are predicted to possess an anomalous ''tomographic'' transport regime that is marked by an odd-even effect in the relaxation times, with odd-parity deformations of the Fermi surface becoming long-lived in comparison to even-parity ones. In this work, we establish that neutral two-component atomic Fermi gases also exhibit this tomographic effect. By diagonalizing the Fermi liquid collision integral, we identify odd-parity modes with anomalously long lifetimes below temperatures $T\leq 0.15T_F$, which is within reach of cold atom experiments. Furthermore, in contrast to electron gases, we find that the odd-even effect in neutral gases is widely tuneable with interactions along the BCS-BEC crossover and is suppressed on the BEC side. We propose as an experimental signature of the odd-even effect the damping rate of quadrupole oscillations, which is anomalously enhanced due to the presence of long-lived odd-parity modes. Our findings suggest that the dynamics of two-dimensional Fermi gases is richer than previously thought and should include additional long-lived modes.
Jeff Maki、Ulf Gran、Johannes Hofmann
物理学
Jeff Maki,Ulf Gran,Johannes Hofmann.Odd-parity effect and scale-dependent viscosity in atomic quantum gases[EB/OL].(2025-08-07)[2025-08-18].https://arxiv.org/abs/2408.02738.点此复制
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